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      Effect of raw versus boiled aqueous extract of garlic and onion on platelet aggregation.

      Prostaglandins, Leukotrienes, and Essential Fatty Acids
      Animals, Antioxidants, pharmacology, Dose-Response Relationship, Drug, Female, Garlic, metabolism, Hot Temperature, Humans, Onions, Plant Extracts, Plants, Medicinal, Platelet Aggregation, drug effects, Platelet Aggregation Inhibitors, Rabbits, Sulfinic Acids

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          Abstract

          The effects of aqueous extracts of raw and boiled garlic and onions were studied in vitro on the collagen-induced platelet aggregation using rabbit and human platelet-rich plasma. A dose dependant inhibition of rabbit platelet aggregation was observed with garlic. Onion also showed dose-dependent inhibitory effects on the collagen-induced platelet aggregation but this inhibition was of a lesser magnitude compared to garlic when related to dose. The concentration required for 50% inhibition of the platelet aggregation for garlic was calculated to be approximately 6.6 mg ml(-1) plasma, whereas the concentration for onion was 90 mg ml(-1) plasma. Boiled garlic and onion extracts showed a reduced inhibitory effect on platelet aggregation. Garlic but not onion significantly inhibits human platelet aggregation in a dose-dependent fashion. The potency of garlic in inhibiting the collagen-induced platelet aggregation is approximately similar to that of rabbit platelets (8.8 mg ml(-1) produced 50% inhibition of platelet aggregation). The results of this study show that garlic is about 13 times more potent than onion in inhibiting platelet aggregation and suggest that garlic and onion could be more potent inhibitors of blood platelet aggregation if consumed in raw than in cooked or boiled form.

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